We used to say that there are a billion users of curl. It makes a good line to
    say but in reality we, of course, don’t have any numbers that exact. We just
    estimate and guess based on observations and trends. It also depends on
    exactly what you would consider “a user” to be. Let’s elaborate.

    The project being Open Source and very liberally licensed means that
    just about anyone can redistribute curl in source format or built into binary
    form.

    Counting downloads

    The curl command-line tool and the libcurl library are available for download
    for most operating systems via the curl web site, they are provided via third
    party installers to a bunch and and they come installed by default with yet
    more operating systems. This makes counting downloads from the curl web site
    completely inappropriate as a means of measurement.

    So, we can’t count downloads and anyone may redistribute it and nobody is
    forced to tell us they use curl. How can we figure out the numbers? How can we
    figure out the users? The answer is that we really can’t with any decent level
    of accuracy.

    Instead we rely on witness reports, circumstantial evidence, on findings on
    the Internet, the occasional “about box” or license agreement mentioning curl
    or that authors ask for help and tell us about their use.

    Command-line tool users

    The command-line tool curl is widely used by programmers around the world in
    shell and batch scripts, to debug servers and to test out things. There’s no
    doubt it is used by millions every day.

    libcurl is what makes our project reach the really large volume of users. The
    ability to quickly and easily get client side file transfer abilities into
    your application is desirable for a lot of users, and then libcurl’s great
    portability also helps: you can write more or less the same application on a
    wide variety of platforms and you can still keep using libcurl for transfers.

    libcurl being written in C with no or just a few required dependencies also
    help to get it used in embedded systems.

    libcurl is popularly used in smartphone operating systems, in car infotainment
    setups, in television sets, in set-top boxes, in audio and video equipment such
    as Blu-Ray players and higher-end receivers. It is often used in home routers
    and printers.

    A fair number of best-selling games are also using libcurl, on Windows and
    game consoles.

    In web site backends

    A few really high-demand sites are using PHP and are using libcurl in the
    backend. Facebook and Yahoo are two such sites.

    Famous users

    Nothing forces users to tell us they use curl or libcurl in their services or
    in the products. We usually only find out they do by accident, by reading
    about dialogues, documentation and license agreements. Of course some
    companies also just flat out tell us.

    We collect names of companies and products on our web site of users that use
    the project’s products “in commercial environments”. We do this mostly just to
    show-off to other big brands that if these other guys can build products that
    depend on us, maybe you can, too?

    The list of companies are well over 200 names, but extracting some of the
    larger or more well-known brands, here’s a pretty good list that, of course, is
    only a small selection:

    Adobe, Altera, AOL, Apple, AT&T, BBC, Blackberry, BMW, Bosch, Broadcom,
    Chevrolet, Cisco, Comcast, Facebook, Google, Hitachi, Honeywell, HP, Huawei,
    HTC, IBM, Intel, LG, Mazda, Mercedes-Benz, Motorola, Netflix, Nintendo,
    Oracle, Panasonic, Philips, Pioneer, RBS, Samsung, SanDisk, SAP, SAS
    Institute, SEB, Sharp, Siemens, Sony, Spotify, Sun, Swisscom, Tomtom, Toshiba,
    VMware, Xilinx, Yahoo, Yamaha